Get Unbanned from EA FC 26: Transfer Market Ban vs Account Ban

Unbanster Research TeamBan Appeal6 Comments

When EA bans an EA FC 26 account, the notification email usually references the type of violation – coin distribution, automation, a payment issue. That reference isn’t just administrative detail. It tells you exactly what category the flag falls into, and the appeal strategy shifts completely depending on which one it is.

Most players skip that part and jump straight to writing a general defense. That’s why a lot of EA FC 26 unban requests go nowhere – not because the case is weak, but because the appeal is addressing the wrong thing entirely.

Before opening the EA FC 26 ban appeal form, read the ban email carefully. The violation type mentioned there is the framework for everything that follows.

Transfer Market Ban or Full EA FC 26 Account Ban – They’re Not the Same Thing

This distinction is unique to this title and it changes everything about how to approach getting unbanned from EA FC 26.

A Transfer Market ban restricts access to buying and selling on the market, but the account itself still works. You can play matches, progress through FUT, and access most of the game. The ban is scoped specifically to market activity. These are issued automatically when EA’s system detects unusual trading patterns – rapid transactions, prices significantly above or below market rate, or volume that looks like coin distribution.

A full account ban locks everything. No matches, no market, no access. These tend to follow confirmed automation tool use, win-trading, compromised accounts, or repeat Transfer Market violations after a previous warning.

Knowing which one applies changes what the EA FC 26 ban appeal needs to address. A Transfer Market restriction that gets appealed as a full account ban – or vice versa – wastes the reviewer’s time and yours.

Save time and stress, appeal the smart way – get a pro-crafted appeal!

What an EA FC 26 Ban Appeal Needs – Starting With the Transfer Market

Transfer Market flags are the most common EA FC 26 ban type by far, and the evidence that moves them is more specific than most players expect.

Trade Feed CSV – export the entire feed from the Web App, not just the flagged transactions. EA’s reviewers look at trading patterns across sessions, not individual deals. A single transaction without surrounding context is almost impossible to defend on its own. Pair it with an order history screenshot from EA App → My Account and a bank statement showing no third-party coin purchases.

Don’t clear the Web App cache before exporting. EA compares logs, and a cleared cache before an appeal reads worse than whatever the logs actually contain.

Other than that, for:

  • automation or sniping flags – proof the software is removed if applicable, a fresh EA Anti-Cheat scan result, and a breakdown of the manual trading pattern that explains the speed. If a VPN or Shadow PC was active, list the exit-node IPs explicitly rather than leaving location jumps unexplained in the login data.
  • win-trading or boosting – match IDs for the flagged sessions, video showing legitimate gameplay, and a direct explanation of any IP or device discrepancies rather than leaving them for the reviewer to interpret.
  • compromised accounts – IP login history, console or Steam recovery confirmation, 2FA now enabled, and original purchase history. Secure the account before submitting.
  • toxicity – full chat log with surrounding context, not just the flagged lines.

What’s Different About EA FC 26 Ban Appeals Specifically

A) The Trade Feed context problem. EA’s reviewers don’t look at one transaction in isolation – they look at the pattern. Exporting only the flagged deal and nothing around it is one of the most consistent reasons Transfer Market unban requests stall even when the individual transaction was legitimate.

B) Javelin + VPN is a bad combination to leave unexplained. EA’s Javelin Anti-Cheat runs device-level checks at launch. A VPN or Shadow PC paired with fast market activity can look identical to an auto-buyer from the detection side – even without any automation software installed. If either was active, disclose it with the exit-node IPs upfront. It’s a much easier conversation than leaving it as an unexplained anomaly.

C) Soft bans resolve without an appeal. If the restriction appeared suddenly and lifted within 72 hours, it was likely a soft ban triggered by activity that looked automated – SBCs completed quickly, rapid market bursts. Appealing a soft ban as a full account ban creates a ticket for something already resolving, which sits in the queue and creates confusion later.

D) Don’t touch the Web App cache. Clearing it before pulling the Trade Feed export removes timestamp data EA uses for log comparison. Whatever the logs contain, they’re more useful intact than cleaned up.

How to Get Unbanned from EA Sports FC 26

In order to unban your EA FC 26 account, you must submit an EA ban appeal.

Here’s how to submit an EA FC 26 ban appeal:

  1. Get on the official EA Support page here;

    Log into your EA account by pressing “Log in” from the top-right corner.

  2. Click on “See all help topics”;

    You’ll be redirected to a page with a list of issues. Make sure to choose “I want to dispute a ban or suspension“, then click on the red “Email us” button.
    Submit EA Sports FC 24 Ban Appeal

  3. Fill in your information;

    Make sure to input an email address that you’re regularly checking, as that’s where they’ll get back to you. As for the platform, select the platform you’re playing on, the same one where you got banned from EA Sports FC 26.
    Contact EA Sports FC 24 Support

  4. Input a concise subject;

    You can go with “EA Sports FC 26 ban appeal“.

  5. Write your FC 26 ban appeal;

    Aim for under 500 words, explaining timeline and evidence, why the flag could’ve been triggered and how you’ll prevent it going forward. Or skip the hassle and let us handle it for you!

Attach any relevant files, if any, then click on the “Send” button underneath the form. Your FC 26 ban appeal will be sent to EA for review.

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About the Unbanster Research Team

We're gamers first and legal-process nerds second, so every ticket is written like we'd write it for ourselves.

Over 100,000 custom appeals crafted across 60+ games during the past decade.

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Reviewed by Michael S., Policy & Compliance Lead.

Comments 6

    1. Post
      Author
  1. Banned for no reason? I was banned today for no reason I bought the game yesterday and have played 1 game I bought some fifa points late last night could this be the reason for my van

    1. Post
      Author

      Heya and sorry to hear that happened to you. Indeed, the ban might be related to your FIFA Points purchase. Did you purchase them from the official website/store?

    1. Post
      Author

      Heya and sorry to hear that happened to you! It might’ve been a false positive ban due to certain unrelated software that’s installed on your computer. Are you using any uncommon work/coding/design software?

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